On the first manic Monday of June, here are some things going on:
From National Review, officials in Madison, Wisconsin allows churches to reopen to the same extent as businesses.
From FrontpageMag, black lives are Black Lives Matter's pretext.
From Townhall, it's time to tell some people "no".
From The Washington Free Beacon, a Rhode Island donut shop decides to end its discounts for police officers and the military.
From the Washington Examiner, a black Georgia state trooper tells Black Lives Matter protesters that he kneels only for God.
From The Federalist, stand firm and don't kneel.
From American Thinker, President Trump saved Washington from the mob.
From CNS News, HUD Secretary Dr. Ben Carson recalls the real systemic racism.
From LifeZette, to CNN, some black lives do not matter.
From NewsBusters, networks push the radical left-wing push to defund and dismantle the police.
From Canada Free Press, authoritarian "control knobs" are no longer working.
From CBC News, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants the RCMP to use body cameras.
From Global News, the Canadian province of Ontario enters phase 2 of its coronavirus reopening.
From CTV News, Canadian military personnel are deployed to a long-term care home in Woodbridge, Ontario hit hard by the coronavirus.
From TeleSUR, police in Haiti demonstrate for better working conditions.
From Morocco World News, the Moroccan government is set to announce its post-lockdown strategy. (This might call from some "stragedy" from Bugs Bunny or "strategery" from President Bush the Younger.)
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey changes its criteria for coronavirus tests.
From Turkish Minute, a Turkish judge says, in a book he wrote, that people arrested in the 2016 coup should be executed.
From Rûdaw, over 400 Kurdish Syrian refugees return to their hometowns in Syria.
From Panorama, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan appoints new chiefs for Armenia's police, army and National Security Service. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From In-Cyprus, beaches in Cyprus have the best water quality in the E.U.
From The Syrian Observer, the body of a 16-year-old Kurdish girl is found dead near Azaz, Syria after refusing to marry a Sultan Murad Division fighter.
From Arutz Sheva, the Israeli government freezes its plans to lift its coronavirus restrictions and restart passenger railroad service.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu hires a Breitbart reporter to be his new advisor.
From The Jerusalem Post, Israeli police detain Fatah activists for alleged "illegal" activities in Jerusalem.
From YNetNews, the Israeli government freezes a bill that would allow the security agency Shin Beit to monitor civilians to trace potential coronavirus contacts.
From the Egypt Independent, the Egyptian health ministry allocates nine more hospitals for coronavirus patients.
From Egypt Today, six hotels in Marsa Alam, Egypt are allowed to have local guests.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, according to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, using the Nile's waters is the "basic rights" of Ethiopians.
From the Saudi Gazette, 71 mosques in Saudi Arabia are closed after coronavirus cases are identified among the worshipers therein.
From The New Arab, a painting by Leonardo Da Vinci re-emerges in Saudi Arabia, where it could be exhibited in a future museum.
From Radio Farda, seminary students and armed forces personnel in Iran protest against women taking up an ancient male-only sport, and Iran finally passes a law to protect children.
From IranWire, the Iranian government uses violence against immigrants from Afghanistan.
From Dawn, Pakistani hospitals are running out of beds to treat coronavirus patients.
From The Express Tribune, Prime Minister Imran Khan tells Pakistanis to keep wearing their masks.
From Pakistan Today, the Pakistani government orders a crackdown on gasoline hoarders.
From Khaama Press, Afghani President Ghani orders an investigation of Afghan refugees being killed by Iranian police.
From The Hans India, the holiest shrine in Sikhism and a popular Hindu temple reopen in India.
From the Hindustan Times, the leader of Tablighi Jamaat still has not submitted his coronavirus test report to the Delhi police.
From ANI, four terrorists killed in the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir were known to have attacked civilians and policemen.
From India Today, construction on a temple to the Hindu deity Ram in Ayodhya, India is scheduled to start on June 10th.
From the Dhaka Tribune, a red zone neighborhood in Dhaka, Bangladesh will go under a coronavirus lockdown starting at midnight on Tuesday.
From the Daily Mirror, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa tells Sri Lankan state officials to refrain from engaging in politics.
From the Colombo Page, the U.S. donates medical equipment to Sri Lanka's frontline coronavirus responders.
From Maldives Insider, the UAE donates medical equipment to the Maldive Islands.
From All Africa, a statement that "Nigeria belongs to Fulani" draws outrage.
From The Jakarta Post, according to a survey, the coronavirus leads to dissatisfaction with the Indonesian government and democracy but now with President Joko Widodo.
From The Straits Times, Singaporean voters will be given recommended times to visit the polls, and disposable gloves.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysia's infectious disease control act is applicable to all states except Sarawak, which has its own disease control law.
From Free Malaysia Today, 269 Rohingya boat people are detained in Malaysian district of Langkawi.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam ratifies a free trade agreement with the E.U.
From The Mainichi, the theme park Universal Studios Japan reopens after being closed for three months.
From Gatestone Institute, the Palestinian problem with "peace".
From The Stream, an interview with a teacher who was fired for criticizing BLM.
From ZeroHedge, data from the WHO suggests that asymptomatic coronavirus carriers are "not very infectious".
From BizPac Review, a Catholic priest in Wisconsin criticizes the Archbishop of Washington for his selective outrage on Presidents Trump and Obama.
From Breitbart, U.K. politician Nigel Farage recognizes how bad BLM is.
From Fox News, judge Emmet Sullivan is set to explain why he has not dismissed the case against General Michael Flynn.
From the New York Post, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) allows elective surgeries to resume in New York City.
And from The Babylon Bee, a member of Antifa lectures a D-Day veteran on how to fight against fascism.
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